[PATCH v3 14/15] nvme: Support atomic writes

John Garry john.g.garry at oracle.com
Wed Feb 14 05:02:21 PST 2024


On 14/02/2024 12:27, Nilay Shroff wrote:
>> Support reading atomic write registers to fill in request_queue
> 
>> properties.
> 
> 
> 
>> Use following method to calculate limits:
> 
>> atomic_write_max_bytes = flp2(NAWUPF ?: AWUPF)
> 

You still need to fix that mail client to not add extra blank lines.

>> atomic_write_unit_min = logical_block_size
> 
>> atomic_write_unit_max = flp2(NAWUPF ?: AWUPF)
> 
>> atomic_write_boundary = NABSPF
> 
> 
> 
> In case the device doesn't support namespace atomic boundary size (i.e. NABSPF
> 
> is zero) then while merging atomic block-IO we should allow merge.
> 
>   
> 
> For example, while front/back merging the atomic block IO, we check whether
> 
> boundary is defined or not. In case if boundary is not-defined (i.e. it's zero)
> 
> then we simply reject merging ateempt (as implemented in
> 
> rq_straddles_atomic_write_boundary()).

Are you sure about that? In rq_straddles_atomic_write_boundary(), if 
boundary == 0, then we return false, i.e. there is no boundary, so we 
can never be crossing it.

static bool rq_straddles_atomic_write_boundary(struct request *rq,
unsigned int front,
unsigned int back)
{
	unsigned int boundary = queue_atomic_write_boundary_bytes(rq->q);
	unsigned int mask, imask;
	loff_t start, end;

	if (!boundary)
		return false;

	...
}

And then will not reject a merge for that reason, like:

int ll_back_merge_fn(struct request *req, struct bio *bio, unsigned int 
nr_segs)
{
	...

	if (req->cmd_flags & REQ_ATOMIC) {
		if (rq_straddles_atomic_write_boundary(req,
			0, bio->bi_iter.bi_size)) {
			return 0;
		}
	}

	return ll_new_hw_segment(req, bio, nr_segs);
}


> 
> 
> 
> I am quoting this from NVMe spec (Command Set Specification, revision 1.0a,
> 
> Section 2.1.4.3) : "To ensure backwards compatibility, the values reported for
> 
> AWUN, AWUPF, and ACWU shall be set such that they  are  supported  even  if  a
> 
> write  crosses  an  atomic  boundary.  If  a  controller  does  not  guarantee
> 
> atomicity across atomic boundaries, the controller shall set AWUN, AWUPF, and
> 
> ACWU to 0h (1 LBA)."
> 
> 
> 

Thanks,
John




More information about the Linux-nvme mailing list